Before you buy that new iPhone, read this.
The death of cell phone contracts may be great for consumers tired of being locked into a two-year commitment, but it has dragged the automatic “free” upgrade down into hell with it. Which is a shame, because top-of-the-line phones are way, way more expensive than most people realize.
Do you know the list price of the new iPhone 6s,
which is available for pre-order now and officially goes on sale next
Thursday? No, it’s not the $199 or $299 you paid when you signed up for
your old phone. It’s $649, just for the cheapest 16GB model.
If you chafe
at the thought of being mugged every two years, which is probably the
“new phone day” pace free upgrades have gotten you used to, here are a
few things you can do to keep your old phone alive longer—and save you
big money in the long run.
1. Delete or reinstall apps that take up a ton of space
First of all, if you don’t use an app, you
might as well delete it from your phone—it’s not doing you any favors
sitting on your home screen. As for the apps you do use, they’re
probably holding plenty of unnecessary data. If you go into the usage
tab in the general settings, you can see which apps use the most.
Obviously photos, music, and podcasts will hold a ton, but more
“consumable” apps like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram probably do too.
From time to time, your phone may automatically perform a “cleaning,”
in which the app’s cache is cleared. You can also be proactive in
clearing out unneeded data. Deleting and then reinstalling these apps
will provide a clean slate and less-bloated phone—which helps eliminate
the need for a new phone with more storage.
2. Disable location services for apps that don’t need GPS
While you could geotag your tweets, disabling the GPS access for most apps can help your phone’s battery life and speed.
In your phone’s Location Services menu in the privacy settings, you can
select which apps get to use GPS and how often. GPS is useful for maps,
weather apps, and location-based apps like Yelp , but you probably
don’t need Dropbox to know where you are.
3. Reduce iOS animation features like Parallax and increase contrast
The newest versions of iOS have some gimmicky
features like Parallax, which makes the phone background shift as you
move your phone. But these aesthetic-only features aren’t much of a
benefit, and rendering animations tax an older phone.
Turning them off frees up that little bit of processing power and
prolongs battery life. Simply go to the accessibility panel in general
settings and select “Reduce Motion.” In that same menu, there’s an
“Increase Contrast” option that takes you to some options to further
tinker with the graphics. Activating the “Reduce Transparency” might
cancel out some of Apple’s careful design considerations, but it
simplifies your phone’s iOS.
4. Get a case
If you’re one of those people who just needs to
experience Jony Ive’s design handiwork free of contamination from third
party cases, you’d better budget some extra money for screen repairs
and all-new iPhones. It’s wiser to buy a case and use it. The Wirecutter gives Speck CandyShell
cases a good review, and they’re available for all models. If you truly
need to feel the power of modern electronics design, take off the case
for a few minutes when you’re at your desk, put it back, and move on.
5. Clean out your photos
The downside of having a top-notch camera
built in to your phone is that the high-quality images it captures fill
up the hard drive quickly. Backing up your photos and videos often and
deleting them from your phone is a must. Especially go after the videos,
since they take up the most space.
6. Disable “Background App Refresh”
If you frequently open a ton of apps and
don’t close them again, they might still be working even if you’re not
using them. While you could close them individually, it’s better to
simply disable “Background App Refresh,”
which you can find in general settings. This will make it so only the
app you’re using can refresh its content. However, it can be helpful to
have some apps working in the background, like Google Maps or
Spotify—you don’t necessarily want your music or directions to pause
while you switch to a different app. Disabling app refresh may not make a
huge difference, but for an old phone, it’s worth a try.
7. Clear old text messages
While it’s not exactly an app you can delete
and reinstall, you can clear your old texts, which may be taking up
massive amounts of storage space on your phone. If you don’t want to
handle this chore yourself, you can also set texts to be deleted after
30 days—which may be all the record keeping you want to have.
8. Restore your phone
If you’ve tried everything but your old phone
just won’t get any faster, you should probably consider restoring it to
factory settings, which should erase most of the damage you’ve done to
it. This will completely clear and reset your iPhone’s hard drive and
RAM, giving it a new lease on life. It won’t fix battery life, although
you can replace the battery at an Apple store for $79.
9. (Maybe) update to iOS 9
Many users have reported that the new iOS 9, released September 16, is optimized for the older iPhones,
and its 1.3GB size versus the massive 4.5GB iOS 8 certainly suggests
that’s true. Besides freeing up more space, the new iOS additionally
adds features like a low-power mode to keep an old device’s flagging
battery from burning through its juice halfway through the day. In
addition, the operating system has ad-blocking that could cut out the
fat that’s clogging up browsing speed, plus app thinning to make sure
duplicate apps are combined into one. Of course, there’s much
uncertainty still with updating older devices, especially phones as old
as the iPhone 4S, so if your phone is already working well, you might
want to stick with what you’re running.
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